Thursday, December 16, 2004

The Morning News is an online magazine which features intimate yet precise writing. One of their most popular features is a series entitled 'Letters from Edinburgh: A Bulgarian Rhapsody'.

Written by Claire Miccio, who is an expatriate in Edinburgh, Scotland, the series consists of her experiences in Bulgaria. If you've never visited that country, here's your chance to immerse yourself in Miccio's intensely realistic writing.

Here's an example:

"From the airplane window I watch Bulgaria's hundreds of drab, Soviet-style tenements shrink into grids of computer chips. In a few hours it's nighttime and the plane passes over the Firth of Forth, descending into Edinburgh. Spangles of gold lights loop across the city like a necklace, and it is absolutely beautiful."

Sunday, November 28, 2004

during the Winter of 2004 in Finland. In tandem with Curator Lance Fung, a whole host of international creative talents designed and exhibited works of snow and ice in the Lapland towns of Rovaniemi and Kemi in an exhibition entitled The Snow Show.

Light glows through an icy construction by the team of
Hollimen, Reuter, Sandman and Barry.

The various forms of frozen water became an avant-garde material for architects open to utilizing unusual building materials.It was discovered that snow lends itself to creative building blocks while ice serves as a long-lasting binder and slush provides a flowing element for sculptural aspects.

Large free-standing “archetonic” forms were built by over 60 architects, designers and artists from around the world, who worked jointly as paired partners, such as Arata Isozaki and Yoko Ono, to design and create structures of environmental art.

Ice and snow is transformed into mystical geometry in the
work of Arata Isozaki and Yoko Ono.

Although the main elements of these structure-sculptures were ice and snow, many of the designs included mixed media, video, light, sound and other building materials as well. The end result demonstrated the ephemeral and ethereal nature of working with the elements of frozen water.

The chill of an Finlandic sky is highlighted against an
opaque structure built by Zaha Hadid and Cai Guo-Qiang.

Sponsored by New York’s Scandinavian-American Foundation, this unique historical exhibition of 2004 demonstrated how collaborative art can evolve in a natural but magical and creative direction which serves to fire the imagination and heart in a completely unique way.

Curator Fung is now in the process of organizing a new Snow Show for the Winter of 2006 in Turin, Italy.

Monday, November 22, 2004

ORIGINS™. Just the sight and sound of the word 'Origins' conjures up images of succulent lip tints and blushes, Zen-like scents and blissed-out soaps and scrubs; all focusing on the natural serenity of beauty. Today, there's even newer items making it on the beauty scene.

How many of us, male AND female alike have been soothed and conforted by Origins' wonderful product line? I mean, just the very names of the products send your imagination into Kundalini overdrive, such as ' Beautiful Skin', 'Peace Of Mind', 'Warm Reception', 'Calming Nature', and 'A Perfect World'. Sigh. White Tea, Lemon, Ginger, Bergamont and Tangerine are a few of the rich sensory ingredients found under the bumbershoot* of Origins.

For those who have not tried Origins' product line; a good way to begin is with 'A Perfect World', which is Origins' White Tea Skin Guardian. It has no harsh ingredients to inflame or stress my skin, but leaves it smooth, glowing, and protected from L.A.'s warm climate; garnering me regular compliments from people who want to know how I keep my skin so beautiful.

Now we can truly rejoice because Origins has a new line of Cocoa Therapy products! Oh yes, chocoholics can now indulge their skin with Cocoa-scented creams, cleansers, buffing scrubs and, in the near future, treat their tummies with Origins' new line of Sensory Therapy Chocolate Bars!

These bars possess herbal ingredients to soothe what ails ya....Chamomile for sleep, Black Pepper for energy or even Basil for a restful and blessed stomach. Until then, there's always Cocoa Therapy, Origins' "chocolate fix"!

Wednesday, November 10, 2004

R & B star Usher was too clean at the recent 2004 American Music Awards, in a black suede jacket detailed with white satin-stitched words and symbols created by London designer Romero Bryan (see another version of the jacket at the Usher link above).

In 2002, the then 17 year old Bryan designed a revealing plunge-fronted dress for pop star Samantha Mumbawhich gained the attention of taut-bodied stylers all over the world.

Since then, Bryan, considered one of Britain’s future young millionaires, has become THE fashion designer of today’s hiphop and R&B superstars, such as Mis-teeq, Louise Adams, Mya, Destiny’s Child, Honeyz, Mel B, June Sarpong, and Usher, as well as juggling courses at the London College of Fashion, working as a roving reporter during London’s Fashion Week and completing his Winter Collection 2005.

Menswear fashionistas on all continents have their eyes trained on London College of Fashion’s Graduate Fashion Week’sparticipant and graduate Yuko Yoshitake, hoping to get their deliciously manicured hands on her graduate collection which has garnered much press and media attention.

Yuko Yoshitake won the LCF Gala Show 2004 Designer of The Year Awardand the Menswear Awardfor her “collection that recycled second-hand fabrics for a 'directional' African -farm- worker- inspired look. This included sleeves striped with faded suede on a black wool duffel coat.”